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The Devil Is in the Details

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Careful control of fabrication steps is key to superior performance from the ubiquitous ultrafast laser material, titanium:sapphire.

Keith Heikkinen and Mark Anderson, Saint-Gobain Crystals

Ultrafast lasers – with femtosecond or picosecond pulse widths – support a growing range of applications, from precision micromachining to multiphoton imaging to attosecond physics. Titanium:sapphire is the most widely used gain material in ultrafast lasers, but optimizing its crystals presents significant technical obstacles. Titanium:sapphire has powered a revolution of turnkey simplicity in ultrafast lasers. Although Ti:sapphire’s wide gain bandwidth of approximately 650 to 1100 nm makes it ideal for both tunable laser output and mode-locked laser operation in the femtosecond pulse...Read full article

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    Published: August 2009
    Basic SciencedefenseFeaturesImagingindustrialMicroscopypicosecond pulse widthstitanium:sapphireTunable Lasersultrafast lasersLasers

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